European Union Open Data Portal - Custom query: Language filters: Italian, Swedish; EuroVoc concepts filters: safety standard; Geographical Coverage filters: Portugal, Poland, Slovenia, Belgiumtag:data.europa.eu,2012:/feeds/custom.atom?vocab_language=http%3A%2F%2Fpublications.europa.eu%2Fresource%2Fauthority%2Flanguage%2FSWE&vocab_concepts_eurovoc=http%3A%2F%2Feurovoc.europa.eu%2F5234&vocab_geographical_coverage=http%3A%2F%2Fpublications.europa.eu%2Fresource%2Fauthority%2Fcountry%2FBEL2021-05-10T17:39:26ZEuropean Publications Officehttps://data.europa.eu/euodpRecently created or updated datasets on European Union Open Data Portal. Custom query: Language filters: Italian, Swedish; EuroVoc concepts filters: safety standard; Geographical Coverage filters: Portugal, Poland, Slovenia, BelgiumEuropean Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks, 2009European Agency for Safety and Health at Workinformation@osha.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/esener-1EU-OSHA’s European Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks (ESENER) is an extensive survey looking at how safety and health risks are managed in European workplaces.
The first ESENER, carried out in 2009, involved nearly 36,000 interviews with managers and OSH representatives. All EU Member States were covered, as were Turkey, Norway and Switzerland — 31 countries in all. The interviewees worked in private and public sector organisations with 10 or more employees.
Representatives of thousands of businesses and organisations across Europe respond to ESENER questionnaires, which focus particularly on:
•General OSH risks and how they are managed
•Psychosocial risks such as stress, bullying and harassment
•Drivers of and barriers to action in OSH management
•Worker participation in OSH
The focus on new and emerging risks means that the responses shed light on underexplored and increasingly important areas of OSH, such as psychosocial risks, which are a growing area of concern in European workplaces.
ESENER provides much-needed data to policy-makers and researchers at national and European level. There is no other EU-level information source on how OSH is managed in businesses. ESENER plays a key role in helping EU-OSHA to provide cross-nationally comparable information that can contribute to OSH policy-making.2021-05-10T17:39:26Z2016-02-12T11:57:49ZEuropean Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks, 2014European Agency for Safety and Health at Workinformation@osha.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/esener-2EU-OSHA’s European Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks (ESENER) is an extensive survey that looks at how European workplaces manage safety and health risks in practice.
Thousands of businesses and organisations across Europe are asked to respond to a questionnaire that focuses on:
•General safety and health risks in the workplace and how they are managed
•Psychosocial risks, such as stress, bullying and harassment
•Drivers of and barriers to OSH management
•Worker participation in safety and health practices.
The results from these interviews are complemented by secondary analyses involving a series of in-depth studies that focus on specific topics. Quantitative and qualitative research methodologies are applied in these studies to help better understand the main findings from the survey.
The fieldwork for the second wave of ESENER was carried out in the summer-autumn of 2014. The survey provides an invaluable up-to-date snapshot of how workplace risks, and especially new and emerging risks, are being managed across Europe.
The focus on new and emerging risks means that the responses shed light on underexplored and increasingly important areas of OSH, such as psychosocial risks, which are a growing area of concern in European workplaces.
The 2014 survey is even more detailed and extensive than the first one, with the sample sizes increased by half, and in three countries the national samples have been additionally boosted. ESENER-2 includes micro enterprises of 5 to 10 employees and agricultural businesses for the first time. Five new countries — Albania, Iceland, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia — have been added to the 31 that were included in 2009.
Some of the topics covered are:
•Musculoskeletal disorders
•The organisation of OSH management
•Approaches to worker participation in OSH
ESENER provides much-needed data to policy-makers and researchers at national and European level. There is no other EU-level information source on how OSH is managed in businesses. ESENER plays a key role in helping EU-OSHA to provide cross-nationally comparable information that can contribute to OSH policy-making.
2021-05-10T17:26:20Z2017-03-28T15:25:24Z